‘Signs of hope’: 17 goals launched to be met in 15 years

Campaigning for youth: the Nobel Peace Prize-winner Malala Yousafzai (centre) addresses the UN General Assembly in New York, last Friday. She urges delegates to empower young people. Afterwards, she gave a press conference with fellow activists (left to right): Shazia Ramzan and Kainat Riaz, from Pakistan; and Amina Yusuf from Nigeria, and Salam Masri from Syria

Campaigning for youth: the Nobel Peace Prize-winner Malala Yousafzai (centre) addresses the UN General Assembly in New York, last Friday. She urges de...

NEW YORK was thronged with presidents, prime ministers, and rock stars over the weekend for the launch of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) (News, Comment, 25 September); but the man who undoubtedly stole the show was Pope Francis.

Delighted crowds of thousands gathered at the places he visited, and his address to the United Nations General Assembly offered a moving and radical account of global suffering, and what must be done about it. Describing how human beings had harmed the environment, and pushed many vulnerable people to the margins, he said that the adoption of the SDGs was “an important sign of hope”.

“Solemn commitments, however, are not enough, although they are certainly a necessary step toward solution,” he warned: governments must also have the will, the wisdom, and the practical means to act on their promises of reform.

The same point was made repeatedly in different forms by many others at the summit in New York. Now that the celebrations are over, the main question is what, if anything, governments and others are going to do about the SDGs over the next 15 years — the period in which they are supposed to be implemented.

There are 17 goals, attached to a total of 169 targets, which are meant to be used to monitor progress. They cover, for example, action to tackle extreme poverty, climate change, equality for women and girls, inequality, and the idea of “leaving no one behind”. In its strongest form, this means that no goal can be considered met unless it is met for all groups in society, including people from religious and ethnic minorities.

Inevitably, with such an ambitious plan for change across the world, including in rich countries, there are disagreements about how the goals should be achieved — and, indeed, whether they are misconceived. In New York, one continuing controversy was about the part played by private companies: the UK Government insists that they have a significant part to play in bringing the goals to life; critics argue that many private companies cannot be trusted, and that, in any case, it is governments, not companies, that have signed up to the goals.

Many UK charities have worked to shape the goals, and are now urging governments to start work on implementing them. The international executive director of Oxfam, Winnie Byanyima, echoed many others in New York with her insistence on the need for change. “The goals are achievable, but it cannot be business as usual,” she said. “Governments, rich and poor, must defy vested interests that seek to maintain the status quo at the expense of people and the planet.”

The chief executive of Christian Aid, Loretta Minghella, said that now governments had formally adopted the Goals, they must get going. “These new goals apply in every country, including the UK,” she said. “They will need to be translated into detailed and fully costed action plans if they are to amount to more than mere words on a page.”

The director of Global Justice Now (formerly the World Development Movement), Nick Dearden, argued, however, that the goals were too much “business as usual. . . Some people are very poor because others are very rich,” he said. “So challenging poverty also means challenging wealth, challenging power. And the SDGs aren’t up to the job.”

It is too soon to know what impact the goals will have. In the short term, however, one likely measure of governments’ willingness to go beyond business as usual in the service of the common good and future generations will be the UN climate summit in Paris in December.

THE life of Christ is the pattern for our response to the global challenges writ large by the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and faith communnities are modelling it, the Archbishop of Canterbury has said.

Welcoming the goals (News, Comment, 25 September) as an “ambitious agenda” last Friday, he sought to emphasise the important part played by faith communities in progress to date. The Anglican Communion had sought to follow Christ’s example in its response to the Millennium Development Goals, he said. It had improved access to education, reduced child and maternal mortality, and was “turning the tide on HIV/AIDS and other diseases”.

He went on: “In places of instability and conflict it is often the Church — along with other faith communities — that is the sole surviving institution providing hope, relief, and support to those most in need.”

In response to the new goals, he said: “The powerful are called to serve, the rich to give, and the vulnerable to be cherished, so that they may flourish and stand strong. . .

“When we recognise the God-given dignity in each and every person in our world, we are compelled to reach out to them in love, whatever the cost.”